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STEVENSON LIBRE
UCSC's first and only student-controlled
non-rbureaucratic newspaper
Year 4 Issue X (17???)
This issue was not edited
---
Editorial Policy
There are no creative minds present during the publication
of this issue, so for an accurate policy, we refer you to a previous
issue. We remind you however that we need writers, typists,
and moral support every Sunday and Wednesday evenings.
Interesting articles and writers should contact Dave Mehr (426-6799)
or Kirk (not Keith) Thomas (5-319 , ext. 4302).
Sincerely yours,
Stevenson Community
Development Project
---
KUNSTLER FOR THE DEFENSE
(The following report concerns a talk given by William
Kunstler at Cabrillo College last week)
Bill Kunstler, the movement lawyer, is one of the most
provocative and gifted speakers I have ever heard. He spoke for
about one hour, then spent another hour and a half fielding
questions. His one heckler was apparently dumb-struck early on
and left after asking his question and before hearing the answer.
William Kunstler began by talking about three trials he.
has been in--the Spock Conspiracy Trial, the Chicago 8 Trial,
and now the Washington's Birthday Conspiracy Trial. He drew comparisons
and analyzed them in terms of the continuing effort on
the part of the pig government to silence dissenters.
The Spock Trial was the first. Dr. Spock, Rev. William
Sloane Coffin and others were charged with conspiracy to counsel
young men to evade the draft. The government chose Irish Catholic
Boston to try the case of a Protestant and a few who were antiwar.
They hoped that Irish-American patriotism would give them
the precedent they needed to go ahead with mass conspiracy trials.
They failed because the defendants were too respectable, among
other reasons.
So they tried again--this time in Chicago. They tried to
get a good spectrum of the left--an old Leftist, two Yippies, a
Panther, a new Leftist, a white radical, a professor, and a student--
and gave the trial as unfair and partial a judge as possible. But
they failed again, because they went too far. Judge Hoffman

STEVENSON LIBRE
UCSC's first and only student-controlled
non-rbureaucratic newspaper
Year 4 Issue X (17???)
This issue was not edited
---
Editorial Policy
There are no creative minds present during the publication
of this issue, so for an accurate policy, we refer you to a previous
issue. We remind you however that we need writers, typists,
and moral support every Sunday and Wednesday evenings.
Interesting articles and writers should contact Dave Mehr (426-6799)
or Kirk (not Keith) Thomas (5-319 , ext. 4302).
Sincerely yours,
Stevenson Community
Development Project
---
KUNSTLER FOR THE DEFENSE
(The following report concerns a talk given by William
Kunstler at Cabrillo College last week)
Bill Kunstler, the movement lawyer, is one of the most
provocative and gifted speakers I have ever heard. He spoke for
about one hour, then spent another hour and a half fielding
questions. His one heckler was apparently dumb-struck early on
and left after asking his question and before hearing the answer.
William Kunstler began by talking about three trials he.
has been in--the Spock Conspiracy Trial, the Chicago 8 Trial,
and now the Washington's Birthday Conspiracy Trial. He drew comparisons
and analyzed them in terms of the continuing effort on
the part of the pig government to silence dissenters.
The Spock Trial was the first. Dr. Spock, Rev. William
Sloane Coffin and others were charged with conspiracy to counsel
young men to evade the draft. The government chose Irish Catholic
Boston to try the case of a Protestant and a few who were antiwar.
They hoped that Irish-American patriotism would give them
the precedent they needed to go ahead with mass conspiracy trials.
They failed because the defendants were too respectable, among
other reasons.
So they tried again--this time in Chicago. They tried to
get a good spectrum of the left--an old Leftist, two Yippies, a
Panther, a new Leftist, a white radical, a professor, and a student--
and gave the trial as unfair and partial a judge as possible. But
they failed again, because they went too far. Judge Hoffman